Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Sunday, November 4, 2007

I got a new student last week: Joe. I'm still trying to figure him out. He's relatively intelligent, but also has a slight attitude. I had to send him out of the classroom on his second day. I know, however, that I am wooed him over to the Sells side, because he's been putting Swizzle sticks in my mailbox every day, and I made him laugh (of course, I did- what am I saying? I'm hilarious!).

Karla, my monolingual, has now advanced her vocabulary to "Oh my goodness," "Good morning," "Oh my gosh," "Sit down," "Stand up," "No, me," "No, Miss Sells," and "See you tomorrow". I'm talking with our CPT on Monday about what I should be expecting from her, since technically she's only been in the country for two months or so.

Also, I'm starting a book fair for our school at our local Barnes and Noble. Soooo, any purchases made with a voucher at those Barnes and Noble-s, 10% goes to my school. Basically, what I'm trying to say is that if anyone wants a gift from me for Christmas, it'd better be something purchasable at B&N and you better tell me what it is before December. Deal?

Things are getting annoying with a colleague. I had a dream where my principal, the colleague, and the colleague's mom was watching me teach a math lesson. Someone overheard me telling about the dream and told the colleague that "Erica had a dream about you and your mom" and now he won't let me live it down! Grrrrr... BOYS!

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Potentially rich

Today I've discovered that although I bemoan my financial plight quite often, I could potentially be rich. If I were not so magnetic toward used bookstores and book fairs, I think I might have enough money not to worry too much about whether my bank account could support another trip to the gas station. This weekend, I spent near $100 on children's books alone! Before you scoff at my weakness, let me at least brag about what I was able to purchase with the money:
Copies of:
"Say What?"
"Bodies in the Hotel"
"Andy Russell and the Flying Hamsters"
"The Story of Ferdinand"
"Skippyjon Jones"
"Stephanie's Ponytail" and "The Paper Bag Princess" by Robert Munsch
one copy of every book in the Captain Underpants series (after my students begged me to get more)
"Orwell's Luck"
"Revolutionary War on Wednesday"
"The Giraffe, The Pelly, And Me"
"The Ugly Princess and the Wise Fool"
"A True Taste for Scarlet and Miniver"
and possibly more
My colleague's birthday is on Thursday, so many of the above titles were purchased for the occasion as part of a read-aloud pack.

Friday, July 27, 2007

The Greatest Sacrifice

According to Harry Potter, it's your soul. According to movies, it's your life. According to a teacher, however, the greatest sacrifice one can give is . . . I can barely confess I've done it! . . . giving away books.

Yesterday, I sat in the middle of my reading area surrounded by books. I had a problem. I had too many books. "Too many books!" you exclaim in authentic horror. "That's just not possible." Actually, it IS possible, and I was able to reach such a point. It happened because a) I am a children's book hoarder, b) I am a Scholastic whore, c) I cannot say no to a book. My classroom library has books from my own childhood, from warehouse sales, from used bookstores and Friends of the Library monthly sales, leftover from the teacher who had resided in my classroom before me, and from many helpful teachers in California who saw me as a beneficiary of all the books they no longer had want or need for.

Our school librarian (and the husband of another third grade teacher) came in and saw me panicking as I sat like a human island in a sea of books. "Help me!" I cried pathetically, and he allowed me to wail out my problem: basically that I had too many books and my classroom library was starting to swallow my classroom whole; a colleague joked that I could keep all my books, but a couple of students would have to sit outside. I picked up a book at random to demonstrate the problem. The book happened to be from an ancient series featuring a character named Calico Cat. "Calico Cat goes to the Zoo": a boring, story with bland pictures about a cat who sees animals at a zoo (what a creative idea!). "What about this?" I said, manically. "I would never recommend this book to someone; I hate this book! But it might have some significance to an ELL or someone just beginning to read."

"Have you ever seen a student reading one of these?" he asked, patiently.

"Ummm... I think I saw Bianca reading one once."

"Is it worth keeping a book you hate, that you wouldn't recommend, just because one student picked it up and read it ONCE?"

"I don't know! Am I hired to be a teacher or a book critic?" I asked, anger rising in my voice.

He told me quietly, slowly, and calmly (appropriate for a librarian, but it may have been fear that I would attack him for making such a suggestion), "Erica, why would you keep a book that lacks quality, when you have plenty of good books waiting to be picked up? Taking out some of the books that are disinteresting and boring will only increase the chance that a student will pick up a book that he actually will enjoy."

Of course he was right. I started going through my books and pulling out books that had no place in my classroom. I took out copies of "Leo and the Butterfly" (BOR-ING), a 70s book asking the question, "What Are Drugs?" (my kids can already tell you that), a couple of books from the series my grandmother bought us when we were growing up with titles like "The Truth About Tattling", "picture" books with no pictures and miniscule print, etc. Although it was possibly one of the hardest things I ever had to do, I ended up with a large box full of rejected books.

I can now look through my library and not find one book that I wouldn't be glad to recommend. There's a great feeling in that! Also, my classroom library now only takes up four bookshelves (still a lot, but about twelve cubic feet less of space than my books were taking up before). It looks good and I feel good about it. I am still struggling with the book critic within, but I get most of those needs out from my child_lit e-mail ring to which I belong. It comes down to this:
I hold my students to an expectation when they come into my class; my books should meet high standards as well.